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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Back to the country,
By
This review is from: Alive As You Are (Audio CD)
As with the psychedelic movement's drift away from density among many of its original hitmakers, so with its followers. The back-to-the-country appeal by 1969 or 1970 lured The Grateful Dead and the Byrds away from West coast urban pressures towards gentler pastures. They stripped down their lysergic or cerebral textures and let the fresh air in.Darker My Love does the same on their third album. It's well-produced, assured, and flows well. But it's quite a departure from their heavier sound, which I admit I prefer, so this does sway my reaction to this record. As with Angelenos cosmic cowboys Beachwood Sparks and 60's garage-protopunk revivalists Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Darker My Love shifts away from drone and depth in their third outing. Their self-titled debut marked a neo-psych record that rivaled the best of the past twenty years of musicians who expand on what that decade started; 2 bettered the first album by a diversity that recalled late Beatles blended with a crunchier, heavier space rock and a post-punk atmosphere. This had been boosted by some of the band being recruited mid-tour when The Fall took them on as their backing band after, them being The Fall, most of its members left suddenly near the terminus of a 2006 tour in Darker My Love's hometown of Los Angeles. This album opens with "Backseat," a lively ditty which sounds so much like the Dead that listeners may think it a bonus track from a reissue of Touch of Gray. The pace steadies as seven out of eleven tracks continue in this mode, which will please anyone wondering if American Beauty or Workingman's Dead may need performers able to deliver a note-for-note re-creation for a tribute concert. This is solid music; no song falls short of this pleasant, sunny mood. But it's a long way up, or down, from the massive assault that created an amazing second album. Fans who may want more of that intensity must seek out the Spaceland releases made at a series of summer 2006 sessions at that L.A. club, made even before 2 in 2008 had bettered the studio debut. That follow-up's first four songs attest to their command of the songcraft that combines energy with dynamics. Dynamics are muted on Alive as You Are.The calm mood defies the album's cover art that features a mascara-rimmed Beatle-haired fop moping behind purple-shaded shrubbery. Instead of gloom, we get glee. This album prefers a casual approach to its return to the decade it loves. While a competent record, the band's range compresses and the panoramic visions of its earlier albums reduce to a window on a garden, a nice view for a few minutes, but not as satisfying as a bracing expedition up peaks and down canyons that their other records took you through, reminding one of another L.A. exponent of dread and doom, The Warlocks, or Austin's percussion-heavy messengers of overload, The Black Angels. A few songs manage to suggest other Sixties influences besides the Dead. "18th Street Shuffle" starts with a "Run, Run, Run" riff that smacks of the Velvet Underground and the vocals match its druggy feel. "Maple Day Getaway" keeps the Dead's shuffling pace, but adds a bit of pedal steel recalling the Byrds' country-rock period. "Dear Author" recalls "I Am the Walrus" in its beat, and "A Lovely Game" hints at the Kinks as well as fellow revivalists Lilys and more British vocal mannerisms. But these and those Dead-like songs pass rapidly on a short album that feels for a band this talented as if dashed off rather than constructed carefully. The talent remains. But Darker My Love can do better if it wishes to show us how it can incorporate its skills into reshaping more challenging material that 2 and the Spaceland tapes have proven in a very convincing way.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A new direction,
By Alejandro "new_fad" (New Jersey, USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Alive As You Are (Audio CD)
Super talented California band DML launches Alive as You Are, their 3rd studio album and this time they have taken a very different turn from their former releases. Even though I love the crazed psychedelic style of their previous work, I must say that the new material is simply amazing, different but keeping that 60's taste with a very unique sound. Like many other great bands, DML is evolving and reinventing themselves. The sound is cleaner, with a very nice production job, and this time they seem to have given more emphasis on vocals and lyrics. Fans are making all sort of comparisons with seminal bands from the 60's and even some Country artists, but I don't want to go there. Listen to it and make your own judgement. Me ... I'm liking it a lot!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Memories,
By Radio Silence "Radio Silence" (Chicago) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Alive As You Are (Vinyl)
Judging from comments from the band regarding the development of this record, and the development of their live show, I fully expected something different with this album. My expectations were confirmed when I heard the band's two samples, "Dear Author" and "Split Minute." Upon listening to the record, I found that my expectations reached in the wrong direction, and the result was a listening experience that was completely surprising, joyful, emotionally engaging.At every turn in the record, the band shows their flexibility, musicianship, and songcraft, showcasing their profound ability to drive your mind through rich traditions without sounding old, tired, or forced. From previous interviews with the band that I have read or watched over time, it is clear that the band fosters a certain honesty about the type of music they want to create, and it is not surprising that I find their explorations through the storied pages of rock'n'roll to be fully unpretentious and completely innocent. The group already provided a wide pallet of sounds in their first two LPs, and this record continues a journey that does not simply run through the history of rock, but also runs through the band's own catalog. (If you are concerned with historical development, I think this record contrasts Darker My Love's previous work as Teenage Fanclub contrasts My Bloody Valentine; it also seems to be as much about The Pretty Things as it is about The Grateful Dead). Darker My Love is a group that explores every corner of their sonic space, every implication and aspect of their musicianship and songwriting. This is where the band's flexibility comes from, and it's not a flexibility that denies them identity, but rather a flexibility that allows them to freely create without regard to identity first. Working through the band's genealogy, the direct recording and dry production were surprising in some regard, switching the balance between vocal performance and musical performance from the previous records. However, the ringing arpeggios, shuffling rhythms, and bright timbre follow aspects of "People" and most of the latter half of the band's self-titled debut, as well as "Immediate Undertaking," "Pharaoh Sanders Tomb," and "Even in your lightest day" from 2. Within their own discography, there are several aspects to Darker My Love, and if 2 followed the path of "Helium Heels" and "Claws and Paws," this one works alongside other trends in the band's development. Instead of emotionally reflecting against waves of fuzz and dense, layered instrumental passages, the listener is presented with immediate, earnest vocal performances that run through parables in the lyrics that invoke automatic writing, or a method of presenting images to help one to recall navigation through the world's spaces and situations. The production and imagery of the record created an experience that was immensely enjoyable throughout; the record helped to guide me through my memories, by leading me through places that I have already visited, but perhaps could not directly recall, or failed to see from a specific aspect. This does not mean that the record looks backwards; on the contrary, an engagement in sensation and the sensible world, framing and developing memories, in turn helps us to develop our own actions and attitudes toward the world. This is perhaps the greatest psychedelic achievement of Alive as You Are; inverting the technological manipulation in favor of a direct aesthetic results in a record that sound deceptively simple and straightforward, but rewards with continual focus and reflection.
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